I'm always excited to take on new projects and collaborate with innovative minds.

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+233543052955

Email

mintahik@gmail.com

Website

https://isaacmintah.com/

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Project

The African First Born

The African First Born is a bold, emotionally intelligent, and culturally grounded exploration of one of the most overlooked roles in African family systems: the firstborn child.

Client

Corporate Client
The African First Born

The African First Born is a bold, emotionally intelligent, and culturally grounded exploration of one of the most overlooked roles in African family systems: the firstborn child. Blending personal experience, cultural insight, and psychological reflection, this book offers a compelling look at how birth order, expectation, and silent responsibility shape the lives of eldest sons and daughters across the continent.

In many African homes, the firstborn is not simply a child. They are expected to become a second parent, a provider, a moral example, and a long-term support system. While society praises their resilience, many suffer in silence — denied rest, delayed in dreams, and often pushed into sacrifice before they have truly lived.

Ghanaian author and digital publisher Isaac Mintah draws from lived experience and real-life testimonies to unpack the emotional, financial, and psychological burden many African firstborns carry. With themes rooted in family systems theory, African philosophy, and generational psychology, this book offers a necessary framework for understanding and healing.

Inside, readers will uncover:

  • The hidden cost of being the eldest in large African families
  • How firstborns are culturally conditioned to suppress personal desires
  • The psychological impact of parentification and premature adulthood
  • The consequences of emotional repression, delayed marriage, and burnout
  • How to set boundaries, rediscover self-worth, and break generational cycles
  • Philosophical reflections on duty, identity, and moral expectation
  • Practical tools for healing, balance, and intergenerational understanding
  • A powerful chapter: The Farewell Plan — exploring how firstborns privately prepare for their parents’ aging, illness, and even funerals

This book is not only a cultural commentary, but a call to healing — for firstborns who want to live beyond duty, and for families who seek to raise children with fairness, empathy, and purpose.

Recommended for:

  • African firstborns navigating silent responsibility and inner conflict
  • Psychology and African Studies students exploring family dynamics
  • Lecturers and researchers in sociology, philosophy, and cultural history
  • Family and trauma therapists working within African or diasporic contexts
  • Parents and guardians managing multichild responsibilities
  • Faith leaders, life coaches, and youth mentors guiding firstborns and families
  • Policymakers, NGOs, and educators shaping family-centered policies and interventions
  • Anyone seeking a deeper lens into African identity, birth order, and resilience

If you’ve ever carried more than your share, this book is for you.

If you’ve ever been the one everyone depended on, but had no one to depend on yourself — this is your mirror and your map.

Because being firstborn is not a sentence. It is a story. And now, it is finally being told.

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